13 KiB
Executable File
Session Notes - October 15, 2025
Session Overview
- Date: 2025-10-15
- Duration: ~30 minutes
- Main Topics: Auto insurance (Personal Auto Policy)
Questions Asked
Topic: Auto Insurance - Personal Auto Policy (PAP)
Student's Request: "I would like to know more about the car insurance. It's a bit confusing to me."
Initial Understanding:
- Had not studied car insurance yet
- Found it confusing as a topic
- Wanted to learn the fundamentals
Explanation Given:
Personal Auto Policy Structure:
Part A - Liability Coverage:
- Split limits format: 100/300/50
- First number: Max per person for bodily injury
- Second number: Max per accident for all injuries
- Third number: Max for property damage
- Alternative: Combined single limit
- NO deductible, but policyholder liable for amounts over limits
- CFP point: High liability limits or umbrella policy recommended
Part B - Medical Payments (Med Pay):
- Pays medical expenses for insured and passengers
- Regardless of fault
- Typically $5k-$10k
- No deductible
- Coordinates with health insurance (no double payment)
Part C - Uninsured/Underinsured Motorist (UM/UIM):
- Protects when other driver lacks adequate insurance
- Covers bodily injury and sometimes property damage
- Important: ~13% of drivers are uninsured
Part D - Physical Damage:
- Collision: Damage when you hit something (car, tree, pole)
- Deductible applies (typically $500-$1,000)
- Pays up to actual cash value (ACV)
- Comprehensive: Everything else (theft, vandalism, fire, hail, animal)
- Deductible applies (often lower, like $250)
- Also limited to ACV
- CFP tip: Consider dropping collision/comp on older low-value vehicles
Who's Covered:
- Named insured
- Family members living with insured
- Anyone using car with permission
- Insured driving someone else's car (with permission)
- Trap: No permission = no coverage
Key Exclusions:
- Business use (need commercial coverage)
- Intentional damage
- Using vehicle as residence
- Vehicles with fewer than 4 wheels
Rental Car Coverage:
- Liability follows you to rental cars (in US)
- Physical damage coverage depends on policy
- Often can decline rental company coverage
Other Coverages:
- Towing & Labor: ~$25-$100 per incident
- Rental Reimbursement: $30-$50/day while car repaired
Comprehension Checks:
-
Split limits calculation: 100/300/50 policy, accident with 4 injured people ($80k, $75k, $60k, $40k)
- Student's answer: Total $255k, under $300k per-accident limit, each under $100k per-person limit → Insurance pays all $255k, zero personal liability ✓ PERFECT
- Demonstrated excellent understanding of split limits
-
Collision vs Comprehensive:
- Student's answer: "Collision if I hit something like another car. Comprehensive covers everything else - theft, car is gone for whatever reason" ✓ EXCELLENT
- Clear understanding of the distinction
-
Family member coverage: Son (18, lives with you, listed on policy) borrows car, causes accident
- Student's answer: Yes, covered ✓ CORRECT
- Understood but didn't elaborate on reasoning
-
Rental car liability: Business trip, rent car, cause accident, have 250/500/100 personal policy
- Student's answer: Yes, covered ✓ CORRECT
- Understood but didn't elaborate on reasoning
Understanding Level: VERY GOOD - Grasped all major PAP components quickly:
- Understands split limits and calculation
- Clear on collision vs comprehensive distinction
- Knows who's covered under policy
- Understands rental car coverage basics
- Ready to move to next topic
Key Learning: Personal Auto Policy has 6 parts (A-D plus towing/rental), each serving different purposes. Liability has no deductible but exposes policyholder to personal liability above limits.
Knowledge Gaps Identified
| Topic | Severity | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Auto Insurance Deeper Details | Low | Basic understanding strong; could benefit from practice problems on edge cases |
Topics Mastered Today
| Topic | Confidence | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| PAP Structure (Parts A-D) | High | Understands all 6 components and their purposes |
| Liability Split Limits | High | Perfect calculation on comprehension check |
| Collision vs Comprehensive | High | Clear distinction and examples |
| Covered Persons | Medium-High | Knows the basics, may need edge case practice |
| Rental Car Coverage | Medium-High | Understands liability transfers, may need physical damage details |
Key Concepts Covered
Personal Auto Policy (PAP):
- Part A: Liability (split limits: per person/per accident/property damage)
- Part B: Medical Payments (no deductible, coordinates with health insurance)
- Part C: UM/UIM (protection against uninsured drivers)
- Part D: Physical Damage (collision + comprehensive with deductibles)
- Additional: Towing/labor, rental reimbursement
Coverage Rules:
- Named insured + family + permissive users covered
- Liability follows you to rental cars
- Physical damage coverage depends on policy language
- Business use requires commercial policy
Key Exclusions:
- No permission = no coverage
- Business use excluded
- Intentional damage excluded
Action Items for Next Session
Insurance:
- Practice: Auto insurance edge case problems
- Review: Coordination of benefits with health insurance
- Review: Umbrella liability policies (how they layer on top)
- Consider: Homeowners + auto together (package policies)
Summary Statistics
Session Duration: ~30 minutes Questions Covered: 1 topic (auto insurance overview) New Topics: Personal Auto Policy structure and coverage Performance: Quick learner, strong comprehension, ready for more material
Topics Mastered This Session:
- Auto insurance PAP structure
- Liability split limits calculation
- Collision vs comprehensive distinction
- Covered persons rules
- Rental car coverage basics
Topic 2: Medicare Insurance
Student's Request: "Let's talk about the whole Medicare insurance thing. Help me to understand the whole Medicare insurance Like 65 All those things"
Initial Understanding:
- ✓ Knew there are 4 parts (A, B, C, D)
- ✓ Part A = hospital coverage
- ✓ Skilled nursing is part of Medicare
- ✓ Long-term care is NOT covered (excellent retention!)
- ✓ Knew about 90-day hospital concept
- ✓ Understood Medicare Advantage has network restrictions and can have $0 premium
- ✗ Had Parts C and D backwards (thought C = drugs, D = Advantage)
- ✓ Knew MAPD term (Medicare Advantage Prescription Drug)
- Partial knowledge on cost-sharing details
Explanation Given:
Part A - Hospital Insurance:
- Covers: Hospital stays, skilled nursing (after 3-day hospital stay), hospice, home health
- Hospital benefit periods:
- Days 1-60: Deductible ($1,632 for 2024), Medicare pays rest
- Days 61-90: Coinsurance (~$408/day)
- Days 91-150: Lifetime reserve days (60 days total for entire life; ~$816/day)
- After 150: Patient pays all
- Skilled nursing (after 3-day hospital stay):
- Days 1-20: $0 cost
- Days 21-100: Coinsurance (~$204/day)
- After 100: Patient pays all
- Cost: FREE if worked 40+ quarters; otherwise ~$505/month
Part B - Medical Insurance:
- Covers: Doctor visits, preventive care, labs, X-rays, outpatient surgery, durable medical equipment, ambulance
- Standard premium: $174.70/month (2024)
- Deductible: $240/year
- Coinsurance: 20% of Medicare-approved amount
- IRMAA: Income-related adjustment can add $70-$400+ to premium (based on tax return from 2 years ago)
Part C - Medicare Advantage:
- Private insurance replacing Parts A + B (often includes D)
- Network restrictions (HMO/PPO)
- Pros: Often $0 premium, extra benefits (dental/vision/hearing), out-of-pocket max
- Cons: Network limits, may need referrals, copays per service
Part D - Prescription Drugs:
- Standalone drug coverage for Original Medicare
- Sold by private companies
- Premium varies ($7-$200+/month)
- Late enrollment penalty: 1% per month delayed (for life)
Enrollment and Penalties:
- Initial Enrollment Period (IEP): 7-month window (3 months before + birthday month + 3 months after turning 65)
- Part B penalty: 10% for EACH 12-month period delayed (for life)
- Part D penalty: 1% per month delayed (for life)
- Exception: Creditable coverage through employer (20+ employees) allows delay without penalty
Comprehension Checks:
-
Enrollment question: Age 65 in June, still working, employer has 100 employees, has group health insurance - should they enroll in Parts A and B?
- Student's answer: "They can wait because they have company sponsored insurance" ✓ PARTIALLY CORRECT
- Understood Part B can be delayed with employer coverage
- Didn't address Part A separately (which is free and can be enrolled without triggering Part B enrollment)
-
Cost calculation: Hospitalized 75 days, deductible already paid - what's the cost?
- Student's answer: "Pay coinsurance $408 per day" ✓ CORRECT NUMBER
- Identified correct coinsurance rate for days 61-90
- Didn't calculate total amount (days 61-75 = 15 days × $408 = $6,120)
- Shows understanding of concept but needs more practice on calculations
Understanding Level: GOOD - Strong conceptual foundation:
- Already knew basic structure of Medicare parts
- Quickly corrected C/D confusion
- Understands enrollment penalty exceptions
- Grasps cost-sharing concepts
- Needs more practice on specific calculations and number details
Key Learning: Medicare has Original (A+B+D) vs Advantage (C), age 65 enrollment critical, lifetime penalties for late enrollment without creditable coverage, Part A has benefit periods and lifetime reserve days.
Knowledge Gaps Identified
| Topic | Severity | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Medicare Calculations | Medium | Understands concepts but needs practice calculating total costs (benefit periods, coinsurance) |
| Medicare Part A vs B Enrollment | Low | Understands delay exception but needs clarity on enrolling Part A (free) separately from Part B |
| IRMAA Details | Low | Introduced but not tested; may need more review |
Topics Mastered Today
| Topic | Confidence | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| PAP Structure (Parts A-D) | High | Understands all 6 components and their purposes |
| Liability Split Limits | High | Perfect calculation on comprehension check |
| Collision vs Comprehensive | High | Clear distinction and examples |
| Medicare Structure (A/B/C/D) | Medium-High | Knows what each part covers, had minor C/D confusion now corrected |
| Medicare Enrollment Penalties | Medium-High | Understands late enrollment penalties and creditable coverage exception |
| Medicare Cost-Sharing Concepts | Medium | Knows benefit periods, coinsurance rates; needs calculation practice |
Action Items for Next Session
Medicare (Continue):
- Practice: Cost calculation problems (benefit periods, coinsurance totals)
- Review: Medigap policies (supplement insurance)
- Review: Part A vs Part B enrollment strategies
- Review: IRMAA income thresholds and calculations
Insurance:
- Practice: Auto insurance edge case problems
- Review: Umbrella liability policies
- Review: Life insurance types and uses
- Review: Disability insurance (own occupation vs any occupation)
Summary Statistics
Session Duration: ~60 minutes Topics Covered: 2 topics (auto insurance, Medicare) New Topics: Personal Auto Policy structure, Medicare parts and enrollment Performance: Quick learner, strong conceptual understanding, retained prior knowledge well
Topics Mastered This Session:
- Auto insurance PAP structure
- Liability split limits calculation
- Collision vs comprehensive distinction
- Medicare parts A/B/C/D overview
- Medicare enrollment rules and penalties
- Medicare cost-sharing structure
Notes
Session 3 - Student is 22 days from exam. Two topics covered today: auto insurance (mastered quickly) and Medicare (good conceptual foundation, corrected C/D confusion, retained knowledge about long-term care not being covered). Student showed excellent retention of previous concepts and made connections between topics. Preferred to keep moving through material rather than deep practice. Ready to continue Medicare deeper or move to other high-priority topics in next session.